\&Q(V)emgpJnTeßftysi^£ TEMPER AND PRIDE I A tempest in a teapot can wreck things as complete ly as a storm at sea. Temper ai?ti pride can blast lives as utterly as the wick edest sin can. Here's a story to prove itl A young couple— both under 30 have been married four years, and have a little girl 3 years old. Both husband and wife are upright, honor able people, but they are undisciplined, and lack self control, and so they quarreled about all sorts of foolish things and got upon each other's nerves, until last summer they decided that they would be better apart and separated. The wife weht to live with a mar ried sister. The husband went his way, and the child was given over to the care of the maternal grandmother who renuWned on very friendly terms with her son-in-law, despite the sepa ration between him and his wife. Both of the little girl's parents visit her continually, and to both of them she puts up the ceaseless plaint, "Where Is my papa? Where is my mama?" as the case may be, and "why don't you both live here, like my grandmama and my grandpapa do?" Even the Child Wonders "But you have your mama, dear," the mother will soothe her by saying. "Yes; but I want my papa, too," the child will wail, "I want you bof at the same time, and I want my home." The child's cries have gone to the Good Time Now For Blood Health The Skin is Working Hard to Cleanse the Body Take Full Advantage of This When you perspire freely see that your blood is assisted by S. S. S. the famous blood purifier. The action of S. S. S. in its rush to the surface of the body causes the proc ess of nutrition to so prepare all those impurities in the blood that they are easily expelled. And as fast as they are removed new materials from a puri fied blood stream are supplied to make a clear, smooth, outer skin of fine tex ture. It is in the summer time, by the aid of S. S. S. that you naturally and quickly get rid of those harmful irritants that gather to cause rheumatism, catarrh, blood risings, eczema, boils and other forms of Impure blood. In a splendidly illustrated book, "What the Mirror Tells" you will learn about the wonders of the skin and what is required to keep it healthy. But first get a bottle of S. S. S. at any drug store and then write for the book to The Swift Specific Co., 104 Swift Bldg., At lanta. Ga. Beware of any attempt to sell you something in place of S. S. S. Coal Prices Advance July 1 Are your household expenses a matter of concern—do you econ omize in every possible way? This is the last month to buy Kelley's Broken, Egg, Stove and Nut sizes at the year's lowest prices—at a re duction of 50c a load. Fill your bin now—before the end of June —and cut down your fuel bill. Why not? H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third St.—loth & State Sts. The Newest Creation Bulgarian Bath Caps, I Auto Caps, Dusting Caps Are an entirely new and exclusive novelty. Full of originality, at tractiveness and beauty. Every kind of a good cap is here— Indoor and outdoor, bathing, morning-shower, motoring, or house-cleaning. 10 STYLES 10 PRICES Forney's Drug Store 42# MARKET STREET Special Note—Sunday Hours: 9 to 12.30—5.30 to 7.30 Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsbura at i:O3, *7:50 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chamber: burg. Car. Isle, Mecnanicsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:03, *7:50, *11:53 a. m '2:40. 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Uechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:18, 3;27 >:3O, 9:30 a. m. For Dilisburg at 6:03, *7:60 and '11:53 a m„ 2:18. *3:40, 5:32 and «:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily except Sunday. H. A RIDDLE, J. H. TONGE, O. P. A Try Telegraph Want Ads. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG ftfSßh TELEGRAPH JUNE 19, 1914. BY DOROTHY DIX father's heatr. He realizes, perhaps too late, that the first duty of parents is not to themselves, but to their chil dren, and that no child is getting a square ilral in life that isn't reared in its own home, and under the watch ful and loving care of both its father and Its mother. In the light of this new knowledge, and with the pathos of his baby's cries for her own ringing in his ears, all of the petty squabbles and spats over nothing seem very small to the man, and he is trying to get his wife to come back and make a new start In a new home that will be built on a se curer foundation than the old one. Let us hope that the woman has gotten her lesson, too, and that she will accept the olive branch her hus band is holding out to her. In the heat of a quarrel nothing on earth looks so much like a cool oasis in the arid desert of matrimony as divorce does. Just to be rid of the nagging, of the fault finding, of the perpetual age, of the grinding tyranny, of the -never-ending fights, how alluring the very thought! Just to be free to live one's own ilfe unhampered, what bliss In the prospect! But the divorced, and especially the divorced woman, finds out that divorce is not the earthly paradise she expect ed It to be. She finds out that she has the perquisites of neither the girl nor the married wonian, that people who sympathize with her don't want her to live with them, and that even the privilege of freedom carries with it the penalty of loneliness. The Wife Soon Changes Be sure that many a woman who arrogantly shakes the dust of her home off of her feet as she leavej It would be glad enough to creep hum t > Miss Fairfax Answers Queries CHANCE ACQUAINTANCE DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: Will you kindly tell me if It is im proper for several young girls em ployed In a commercial house to ar range a meeting between themselves and young man who occasionally calls up our office and who has become very friendly over the wire. This, of course, being rather a meeting for curiosity sake. CONSOLIDATED. If this young man is deeply inter ested In you he can easily arrange to be introduced. Let him make the advances. - Even for the sake of a lark it does not pay to make yourself too easily attainable. THE STEPMOTHER DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am sixteen and am living with my stepmother. She -tells me that she hates me and wishes I would get out of her sight where she will never see me again. Would you advise me to leave home? ANXIOUS. You are far too young to leave home. Try to win your stepmother's love. Go to her and tell her that you are just at the age where you need the advice and sympathy of a mother or older sister. Ask her is she won't stand in the place of one of these? Tell her you want to deserve her love and that if she will tell you of any offense you have ever gi% r en her you will strive to avoid that in future. If by your sweetness you can win her affections it will be a triumph of which you may be proud. If this fails, write me again. FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Re move Them With the Otlilne Prescription This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and Is usually so successful In removing /reckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by druggists v. der guarantee to refund the money if It fails. Don's hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of othine and re move them. Even the first few appli cations should show a wonderful Im provement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; it is this that is sold on the money-back guarantee. —Advertisement. HARRISBURG ACADEMY Summer School August 3d to September 11th Students desiring to review courses of study for examination or to secure school credits will have the best instruction. Special attention given to individual pupils. For rates and other information phone Academy Office (Bell 1371-J), or write the Headmaster (Box 617.) GLASSES SI.OO National Optical Co. 34 Jf. Third St. Near Postufflce liIIiHi'JBIIIiKI Nou-greasy Toilet Cream keeps the skin soft and velvety tn rough weather. An exquisite toilet prep aration. 25c. UOHUAS DHI'G STORES 10 N. Third SI, and P. H. It. Statlsa V. , pipe Organs Rebuilt, Repaired, Tuned F T PARR 2141 r ' nn st -1 • IlarrlHlturg. Formerly nlth the W. W. Kimball Urean Co., Chicago* bly in at its back door. If she could, after a few months of separation from her husband. The way is open to this one. May Heaven send her wisdom enough to go back, and retrieve the mistake of her youth, and make a Suc cess instead of a failure of matrimony. After all, what a sordidly pitiful thing it is to think of a home being wrecked, of a little child being or phaned by temper! What a confession of weakness it is on the part of two grown-up human beings not to be able to control their tongues! How little people must love their children when, for the sake of saying a few biting and unpleasant things, they are will ing to jeopardize that child's whole life! In plain English, thafs what the whole situation arr\punts to. Every man and woman in the world who thinks at ull knows that It takes a mother and a father working together in harmony to bring up a child prop erly. Everybody knows that the most pitiful thing In the world is a little orphan child, and the next most piti ful thing is a half orphan child. Orphan Their Clilldrcn Yet, knowing this, simply for the sake of indulging their tempers, hus bands and wives will quarrel until they can endure it no longer, and then separate, thus deliberately orphaning their children. Everybody knows that next? In im portance to parental influence and af fection comes environment, and that only in a home does the child really flourish. This is so Indisputably true that an effort is continually made by all the children's welfare societies to take children out of orphan asylums and put them In private families, in homes. FLOUNCINGS LIKED FOR CORSET COVERS No Woman Ever Hat Enough of These Dainty and Important Garments 8278 Corset Cover, Small 34 or 36, Medium 38 or 40, Large 42 or 44 bust. Pretty corset covers may safely be counted among the garments of which there is never a sufficient supply. This one is so simple and can be made so easily and quickly that it is an easy matter to add a generous number to the supply on hand. There is just a straight strip to which shoulder straps are attached and the lower edge can be finished with a belt, or with beading threaded with ribbon or slits can be worked through which ribbon is passed. Flouncings of lace and embroidery are well adapted to the model but any material can be cut into a straight strip and finished at the edges. In one view, net is shown with ribbon straps and the combination is an attractive one. For the medium size, the corset cover will require yds. of material 18, yd. 36 or 44 in. wide or iH yds. ol flouncing 14 in. wide, with 3% yds. of ribbon. The pattern 8278 is cut in three sizes, small 34 or 36, medium 38 or 40, large 42 or 44 inches bust measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion De. part ment of this paper, on receipt of tea rent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. FEET AREN'T ACiIT OR TIREDJOIIII-"TIZ" It's grand for sore, swollen sweaty, calloused feet and corns. Good-bye sore reet, burning feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. "TIZ" is magical, acts right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use "TIZ" and wear smaller shoes. Use "TIZ" and forget your foot misery. Ah! how comfort able your feet feel. Get a 25-cent box of "TIZ" now at any druggist or department store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, never get tired. A year's foot com fort guaranteed or money refunded. — Advertisement. Try Telegraph Want Ads. 4TH ST. CHBRCH OF CHRIST CEIEBRITES Growing West End Congregation Commemorates Fifteenth Anniversary The Fourth Street Church of Christ will celebrate the fifteenth anniversary of its or ganization Sunday and .. will continue the serv .•' ..l.i a ices until Thursday • BW.. The Rev. Hs F. Llltz, • .'l/Ajjl' of Washington, D. C., ' - JKJJfI who qrganlzed the lHuf* church, will speak on Sunday evening. His topic will be "The Church Glorious and ~ A/yJ Triumphant." Mon- IffiT r» f J ■ fiT ' d a y evening the Rev. Melville Minges, late of Cuba, will speak on "The Price of Progress." On Tuesday evening the Rev. Dr. Town send, of Hagerstown, Md., will speak on "The God-Pleasing Life," and on Wednesday evening the Rev. E. C. Lunger, of Williamsport, will preach on the "Debt We Owe to the Past." The closing service will be held on Thursday evening and will consist of a musicale, given by some of the best musicians of the city. These services promise to be of exceptional intorest and helpfulness. Two Churches Picnic.—The annual union picnic of the Sunday schools of the Fifth Street and the Grace Meth odist Episcopal Churches was held to day at Hershey Park. A special ex cursion train left the Reading station this morning dt 8.15 o'clock. Among the Interesting events during the day was a run from Hummelstown to Her shey by the boys of the Fifth Street Church. Creatore Here Tonight The following are a few of the en dorsements 01 the bress from ocean to ocean secured by Sig. Creatore and his band which will appear at Paxtang to-day: ISew lork World: Creatore receiv ed the most remarkable ovation ever accorded a like organization by any audience in this city." Boston Transcript: "Every day that Creatore stays with us we appreciate as so much added to our musical life. e wish a band such as he breathes passion into at every concert would establish itself at Boston." .. Evenlng Bull etin, Philadelphia: Nothing that Creatore does appears like affection. It is genuine enthu siasm, and that he imparts it to his men is proved by the brilliancy with which they play." Pittsburgh (Pa.) Despatch: "Crea tore filled the Exposition Music Hall as it has seldom been filled, and held the attention cf the audiences as have seldom been held, and won salvos of applause seldom equaled." Cleveland Plain Dealer: "Creatore is a musician. His methods are sin cere. Results are what he is striving for. That he attains them is testi fied by the tremendous enthusiasm that follows his vigorous efforts." Detroit Free Press: "It is a revo lation to hear him play an overture " Salt Lake Tribune: "Ck-eatore is an artist. From the beginning to the end of last right's program his per formance was artistic." Oregon Daily Journal: "Creatore conducted ;n a manner that was uni que, unconventional, amazing." Seattle Daily Times: "it was one of the finest examples of ensemble melody that Seattle has ever heard " Daily News-Advertiser, Vancouver: "Creatore is great, and we never have and probably never shall, hear his like again."—Advertisement. Firemen Hold Carnival to Buy New Apparatus Special to The Telegraph Northumberland, Pa., June 19. Preparations are being made by the No. 1 fire company for their big car nival which starts to-morrow even ing and lasts a week. The amuse ments will consist of pie-eating con ests, races, cakewalks, etc. On Tues day night the Friendship Hose Com pany, of Sunbury, will be present. The Rescue Hose Company, of Sun bury, will also be on hand on one of the nights. The closing day of the carnival, June 27, will be tag day. The proceeds from this affair will be add ed to the fund for the purchase of a chemical engine and hose truck' com bined. , Boys' League to Be Guests of Philadelphia Authorities Spectal to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., June 19.—The Boys' League of Good Citizenship, under the direction of . tiss Ada M. Forry, will be the guests of the Philadelphia citv authorities on Thursday, June 25, when they will ro in a special car to historic points of interest in Eastern Pennsylvania. Seventy - five young boys will be in the party, which will be commanded by Major Edward C.I Shannon of the Fourth Regiment, Na tional Guard, with Harry W. Zeamer and Henry B. Clepper as assistants. Reformed Churches Hold Union Picnic at Grove Hundreds of people from this city left on a special train this morning at 8.30 o'clock for Williams Grove, where the first of the season's union Sunday school picnics is being held by the Reformed churches of this city. , program during the day in cludes baseball games, various races ,and contests. KLEIN CO. June Clearance Sale Unparalleled Offerings on Suits, Coats, Dresses, Waists, Skirts and Underwear All of the merchandise is of this season's style in every desired model, which because of the Klein Co. policy of not carrying merchandise from one t season to another, will be sold at prices far below their former selling price. Extra Special Offerings For Saturday —SUITS —WAISTS Extra Special For Stoat Women Voile Waists with organdie collar Serge Suits in black and white for anc * cuffs, $1.75 values. Saturday, stout women. Sizes 41 to 51. Straight QQ front coat and large skirts. Sold for- «/OC merly from $17.50 to $29.75. Saturday, I—— Messaline Petticoats in all the wanted •DRESSES colors and models. All sizes. $2.98 values. "" Saturday, Linen, Eponge, Striped Voile and A m Pique Dresses. In all sizes, models and 1, oOi/ colors. Formerly $8.75 to $15.00. Sat urday, p"— $1.98 —UNDERWEAR Muslin Drawers. Lace and embroid p— —————i____________ ery trimmed. Regularly 39c. *| Q CCiA TQ Saturday 11/ C Muslin Combinations. Embroidery Black Serge and Whip Cord Coats trimmed. Formerly $1.49. for elderly women. Full length. Sizes Saturday 39 to 47. Regularly $13.50. Saturday, Muslin Petticoats. Embroidery 7 Oft fl° unces with dust ruffle. A/\ tP « *«7O Formerly 98c. Saturday ... frl/C The New Store For Womeu 9 North Market Square CHERRIES SOLD BY TREE Special to The Telegraph Greencastle, Pa., June 19. The crop of cherries around Greencastle is unusually large and they are being sold very cheap. Many farmers are selling the product of trees for fifty cents a tree, the purchaser to pick the cherries. CLERIC ELECTS OFFICERS Special to The Telegraph Greencastle, Pa June 19.—0n Tuesday the Presbyterian cleric of the Southern Cumberland Valley, was en tertained at the home of the Rev. J. B. Farrell and elected these officers for the ensuing year. President, the Rev. Edwin H. Kellog, of Carlisle, and secretary-treasurer, the Rev. O. C. Qvert/hodt/sflnnk ! a v JSn Sm M dffoti, Wl ■ Hf# ahL^ good—and keenly y delicious. Thirst-quenching I m and refreshing. I I The national beverage—and M Demand the genuine by full name— Nicknames encourage substitution. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Whenever Atlanta, Ga. you tee an 1 v * u * Arrow think of Coca-Cola. Bosserman, of Shippensburg. Minis ters from all along the valley were present at the meeting, and the Rev. Dr. T. T. Everett, recently pastor of a York Lutheran Church, was a guest of .the cleric. STRAWBERRIES CAUSE DEATH Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., June 19.—Yesterday the body of Paul Lisbon Feuton, 4-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Feu ton, of near Monterey Tannery, whose death occurred after a few hours' ill ness of convulsions, caused by eating many strawberries, was shipped from this station to Wind Fall, Bradford county, Pa., for burial. Mr. Feuton has charge qt the State Game Preser vation. 15 SEE YOURSELF IN THE MOVIES Harrisburg Telegraph Pictorial showing the complete Flag Transfer parade at the Photoplay to-day and Saturday.—Advertisement. TAKE TEACHERS' EXAMINATION Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., June 19.—Applicants who took the teachers' examination for provisional certificates at New Bloomflold from this place were Miss Anna L. Fetro, Miss Elsie Bistline, Miss Lee Smith, Miss Frankie B. Dimm, Miss Goldie Wentz, Miss Pearl Collins, Foster Gutshall and Leslie Shumalcer.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers